Czech tennis player Petra Kvitová is fearlessly speaking out about the stabbing incident that left her with a serious hand injury.

The two-time Wimbledon champ, 28, made an appearance in Czech Republic court on Tuesday, where she testified against her alleged attacker who entered her apartment wielding a knife and stabbed the 10-inch blade into her left playing hand.

“Even today, the mobility is not 100%. There is no sensitivity in the tips [of my thumb and index finger],” she said, as reported byThe Guardian.

The man, identified by the Associated Press as Radim Zondra, first allegedly rang Kvitová’s doorbell at 8:30 a.m.

To gain entry in the home, Kvitová said he pretended to be a workman inspecting her flat’s hot water system, according to The Guardian.

“He asked me to turn on the hot water tap and at that moment I had a knife against my neck,” the tennis star recalled, as reported by the outlet. “I grabbed it with both hands. I held the blade with my left hand. I snatched it away, I fell on the floor and there was blood everywhere.”

Petra Kvitova

CTK via AP

After attempting to reach for her cell phone to no avail, Kvitová said she desperately needed to go to the hospital to treat the injury and asked the man if he would take money and leave, The Guardian reported.

“He asked how much I had. I said ten thousand crowns ($440 USD) and he said ‘Okay.'” the athlete recalled in court. “I gave him the money, he left and I called the ambulance and then the police.”

Kvitová required four hours of surgery to repair her hand, reported The New York Times. Her surgeon, Radek Kebrele, originally said in a press release that her chances of playing again were “very low” for “multiple reasons,” according to CNN.

“I knew this day would come but sometimes when I was watching tennis on TV, I didn’t really feel great,” she told reporters at the time. “I felt like the tennis was taken away from me, and it wasn’t my decision.”

“Suddenly, I couldn’t do what I love. So I’m happy that I can be here,” she added. “I’ve already won my biggest fight. I stayed in life and I have all my fingers.”

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Kvitová’s testimony on Tuesday was requested by Zondra’s lawyer, but she avoided her attacker in the Brno courtroom. Instead, the tennis player shared her side of the story through a live video feed from a separate room, AP said.

Despite not seeing him in person since he allegedly attacked her, Kvitová was confident in her ability to identify Zondra based on photos provided by the police.

“I knew it was him the moment I saw him [in the pictures],” she said, according to The Guardian. “I remembered his eyes mainly.”

Zondra pleaded not guilty on Tuesday but faces up to 12 years in prison if convicted, AP reported. At this time, it is not clear when the verdict will be issued as Zondra is currently serving a prison term for a separate crime, the outlet said.

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